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Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Raising Japanese Moss Balls

I Luckily Found it in Net, Wow I should try it someday~^^!!!
& the last one is the Video on how to care the Marimo Ball~^^!

Japanese Moss BallFactoids

Origin

Japan, Northern Europe (Mooskugeln), and Iowa

Substrate

Immaterial -- not rooted

Fertilizer

Encourages growth

Maximum Size

4 to 12-inch diameter. Four most likely in aquaria.

Reproduction

Division of the ball.

Temperature

Immaterial

Lighting

12 hours of good light

Threats

Dim light, copper, other plants, debris

Water

Immaterial

Type of plant

Algae -- in spite of the name

LAMoss ball with baby convict -- and lots of debris. We found you could clean moss balls by squeezing them like a sponge filter. That's where all this debris came from. Squeeze them to clean them in a bucket outside of their tank -- not in their tank. The debris settles down, of course, but it settles on the moss balls also.

Botanical Name Note. Evidently, you can find moss balls under two names. Americans use the name Chladophora and the rest of the world uses Cladophora. Seems we're decades late catching on to these intriguing specimens. (We'll, at least some of us were late.)

LASome sources consider them "difficult." Others say very easy. Seems their only serious requirement is good light. Most of the German pictures showed bright green specimens. We need more light. Actually, these moss balls are greener than they look here. The light blue background throws off the camera's light meter.

LAPlenty of debris to go around. Moss balls are better known in Europe. The Germans sell moss balls on the internet for € 3,50 to € 6,00 (Euro Dollars). Some Germans call them Russian Moosballen.

LAIn Lake Akan in Japan, these what they call Marimos rise and fall during the day. The oxygen they produce makes them lighter so they rise to the top. Lake Akan abounds with these spherical algae growths which are considered a national treasure. They are protected by law, so, people steal them, of course.

LAWe'll clean up their water and fertilize them also. We'll need to change that background. It throws off the camera's light meter and makes them look nearly black.

Here's a little closer to their real color.

Moss balls really look like this out of the water. Now we have to see if Americans can adjust to adding algae to their aquaria

LASo we ripped one into 10 pieces. Outside of the ball on left. Inside right. The inside was full of mud -- mostly clay -- which explains all the debris in the water when you squish them to clean them.

LAIn a moosballen breeding tank they look like this. We'll see what happens to these baby moosballen over time.

LAI'm the king of the world! As you can see, moosballens are debris magnets. In this case, the ghost shrimp came up here looking for the food on this moss ball.

LALots more kings, queens, princes, and princesses of the world. When you look behind their eyes, you can see the food in their stomachs.

LAFive days later we're seeing some growth (we think) in the baby moosballen.

LASeven days later, we can tell they're growing (02-11-04).

LAWe sacrifice two more moosballen for science (02-14-04).

LATop view of some baby moosballen and baby convicts. These are the first one sacrificed to science. They're already looking more spherical.

Starting to look like a real moss ball. (02-29-04) Still attracting debris. Outside power filters clean this out of the water.

LAThe other side of the same moss ball.

LASame baby moss ball 03-06-04 looking like a smaller and shaggier version of its "parent." The entire process took about six weeks. We never did add the fertilizer. The only nutrition they received was from the water changes we made to get rid of all the debris we made when we squeezed the moss balls. We'd have to rate these guys "fairly easy" on the basis of these three moss balls that now number 30 moss ballets -- smaller of course. And if we did not mention this earlier, moss balls grow wild in Iowa creeks.

Baby moss balls now appear on the market. The smaller guys are affordable LA.